In the late 1940's country and western music was at a peak and in 1948 the Skyline Club opened
two and a half miles north of Austin's city limits, on the old Dallas Highway, a roadway lit up by nightclubs. The club was jointly owned by Warren, Gerald and Margaret Stark and was a "roadhouse" in the traditional sense.
Hank Thompson said,
“It was a small place. You were right there with the audience, and they’d just all gang around. It was a fun place to play from that standpoint. The ceiling was low and the stage sat only a few inches higher than the hardwood dance floor. “At that time it would only hold about two hundred, maybe two fifty at the most. We’d always have it jam- packed with people. It was a very intimate place to
play.”1

Hank Thompson at the Skyline ClubPhoto courtesy Ger J. Rijff

Other accounts described it as large, with room for approximately 500 people, but concur with its popularity, often a crowded place on Wednesdays or Thursdays with
"10 cent Beer Night." Cars would park not only near the Skyline Club, but also on the east side of the roadway, oftentimes creating difficulty for traffic.2

Aside from being a popular venue for a plethora of
country music artists at the time, including many from the Louisiana
Hayride, it is historically significant as the venue for the
last public performances of both Hank Williams and
Johnny
Horton, albeit
eight years apart. Hank made his last public performance on
December 19, 1952.

Austin resident
James Grabowske was a steel
player in several prominent Austin bands and a member of the the
Skyline's house band at the time. He had backed up Hank a number of
times at both the Skyline and nearby Dessau
Hall. He recalled, you had to close at 12 a.m. Back then they had
the liquor laws. Normally, we would open the show, and then the guest
headliner would make three special presentations. We would play 30
minutes or longer, they would come on and play 30 minutes, then they
would leave, and we would play. They would come back three different
times. He (Hank) barely made it to the first show. He tried to
make the second stage appearance, but he was shaking too bad. And, of
course, we all felt sorry for him, but then, evidently, Warren saw what
was happening and came and got him.1

Hank Williams and James Grabowske in rear to his' immediate
left at Dessau Hall - 1950Photo courtesy Jim Grabowske and The
Austin Chronicle

Just under two weeks later Hank would die in the backseat of his Cadillac
on the way to a New Years gig in Canton, Ohio. He was only 29.
Strangely enough it is reputed that he was wearing blue suede shoes at
the time. Almost three years later, October 6, 1955, Elvis, Scotty and
Bill made their only appearance at the Skyline. It was their third
appearance in the Austin vicinity, having played the
Sportcenter just over a month before.

The show at the Skyline was their second appearance that day having
played a show in the afternoon at Southwest Texas State
University in San Marcos, about 30 miles south. Peter Guralnick,
in Elvis
Day by Day, wrote that the group's gross income for September
was $3,300 and that starting in October the band was put on a fixed
salary of $200 a week when they worked, with a retainer of $100 when they
weren't.3 According to Scotty,
Bob Neal told them it had been decided that their old verbal agreement,
whereby Elvis received 50 percent and Scotty and Bill each received 25
percent, was no longer acceptable.4

Elvis at the Skyline Club - Oct. 6, 1955Photo courtesy Ger Rijff

Scotty and Bill were devastated. It was the end of the Blue Moon Boys.
They had begun with Elvis as partners. Now they were nothing more than
salaried sidemen. They never had a written contract, so they didn't have
a legal leg to stand on. They threatened to quit, in a quiet sort of
way, but Neal was adamant: take it or leave it. Scotty and Bill blamed
it on Parker, but Neal told them it was not Parker's doing, a story he
has stuck to over the years.4

According to Neal: “The eventual basic decision [to put the band on
salary] went back to Elvis. We talked about it quite a few times, talked
about it with his parents, and finally decided that it had to be done. I
had to handle that, and remember that there was quite a bit of
unhappiness at that time plus threats that maybe they would quit, but as
it worked out they went ahead in that particular situation."5
Despite Neal’s protestations that it was
not Parker - and evidence that the decision was indeed made by Elvis - to
this day Scotty refuses to believe Elvis would betray him.4

There was no show booked for the following day so Elvis and
Tillman Franks took a bus to Houston to see "Western Swing" king Bob Wills at
Cook's Hoedown
Club while everyone else relaxed and made their way back to Shreveport
for Saturday's Hayride commitment. According to Franks, neither Elvis nor Wills
were particularly impressed with the other.3
Together, Elvis, Scotty and Bill would make one more appearance in
Austin the following January at the Coliseum.

Johnny Horton was on the
same bill as Elvis, Scotty and Bill boys at the Skyline
appearance, in addition to their last date in Austin at the Sportcenter
in August. He had been a member of the Hayride since 1952 and had
become friendly with Hanks Williams but that year in 1955 Tillman Franks
took over as his manager and his career started to take off. He would later have a
hit with The Battle of New Orleans.

Like Hank
Williams, his last ever appearance was also a show at the Skyline Club, on
November 4, 1960. He was killed later that night driving to Shreveport
in a head on collision with a truck driven by a drunk driver. Both
Tillman Franks and guitarist
Tommy Tomlinson were in the car and injured in
the crash. If it isn't strangely coincidental enough, Horton also happened to be married at the time to Billie
Jean Jones, Hank's
second wife and widow.

James Grabowske, once again a member of the house band
at the Skyline, just happened to be backing Horton that night too.
Grabowske would play with Jody Meredith & the Roundup Boys at the Skyline until the mid-Sixties.
By the Sixties, country-music audiences were in flux. Times were changing fast: Not only was the genre evolving into
"countrypolitan"; progressive country was rearing its shaggy head. Even when Asleep at the Wheel kicked off the Western swing revival in the Seventies, it was regarded with cultish adoration and not the broad acceptance of audiences from the Forties and Fifties. The sun had set on an era.6

The Skyline was owned by the Starks until the early
Seventies. According to Charles Stark, Warren's nephew, the new owners of the property
bought it simply for a land investment. For a time it was rented out
for use by another Austin nightclub, the Soap Creek Saloon. During that time
several scenes from the film Honeysuckle Rose
starring Willie
Nelson were filmed there.7

Today the old Dallas Highway is North Lamar Boulevard and a
CVS now occupies the site at 11306 North Lamar where the Skyline once
stood. All that remains of the Skyline is the large neon sign,
that has since been relocated as a fixture to Hill’s
Café in Austin's trendy SoCo (South Congress) district. Of
the original three owners of the Skyline, Margaret is the only that
survives and recently celebrated her 88th birthday.

Special thanks to Charles Stark of the
soon to be official website of the
Historic Skyline Club in Austin Texas for his assistance with this
page. In addition to those listed the histories of Hank Williams
and Johnny Horton are available from more than a few online sources.

All photos on this site (that we
didn't borrow) unless
otherwise indicated are the property of either Scotty Moore or James V.
Roy and unauthorized use or reproduction is prohibited.